Confusion about France measles outbreak and immunisation

Hi thereI appreciate posting here isn't a replacement for speaking to my GP (which I intend to do as soon as I can) but I just wondered if anyone out there was in the same position as me and confused by the news last week of the measles outbreak in France. The reports in the media said people shouldn't travel to France with children that have not yet had MMR/measles vaccination. We are going to France (southern - Pyrenees) a few days before our son's first birthday, so he won't have had his MMR before we go. Does anyone know what the advice is? Should babies be immunised before traveling to France? I am really conscious of the massive public health issue involved with not immunising a child against this awful disease....and also the risk to my son of contracting it.Anyone looked into this yet, with holidays to France in mind? Thanks so much

My DD is almost 10 months old and she had an additional MMR on Friday - we are going to France next month for a month, and obviously she is too young for the scheduled MMR that you get at 13months. I have been told she still needs to have this one anyway, ensuring that there is at least 3 months between this and the next (scheduled) injection. Something about how they don't get the full benefit of the injection at the younger ages, only from 12/13 months onwards - so she still has to stick to the immunisation plan.

IMO (and NHS direct, etc said the same) that some immunity is better than none - there will be other children around, even if the baby is not mixing (older siblings, people at shops/beach, etc), so I opted for the injection in the hope that it will provide her with some immunity. HTH

I live in sw France south of Limoges, and, although nowhere near the Pyrenees, locally there hasn't been talk of any problems. Dd (13) didn't have MMR in the UK before we left, and separate vaccinations are available here.

might be worth checking the percentage of people who contracted measles who have been vaccinated, as I believe that it's a bit of a lottery depending on individual susceptibility - my neighbour's 19 year old daughter returned from Paris with a full-blown dose never having been vaccinated, but recovered fine. My three year old has had no jabs, and I confess to feeling quite nervous at the thought of his possible exposure.